Allied Arts Guild - Menlo Park, California
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member DougK
N 37° 26.500 W 122° 10.725
10S E 572648 N 4144185
Allied Arts Guild is a complex of artist studios, shops, restaurant, and gardens in Menlo Park, California. It is used as a venue for both public and private events.
Waymark Code: WMR0XA
Location: California, United States
Date Posted: 04/25/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member NW_history_buff
Views: 1

The San Francisco Guide says:
Right from Menlo Park on Cambridge Avenue 0.7 m. to the ALLIED ARTS GUILD (open weekdays 9-5:30), an institution organized in 1930 to help finance the Stanford Convalescent Home for Children in Palo Alto. The guild maintains a tea room and a group of studios which display weaving, ceramics, metal- and wood-craft, and block printing. These are housed in a group of buildings admirably designed in seventeenth-century Spanish Colonial style by Gardiner Bailey on land owned originally by John and Margaret Murray, who came here in 1854. The estate's great charm is enhanced by the beautifully appropriate landscaping of the gardens.
Today, the Allied Arts Guild stands as a cluster of buildings tucked into a neighborhood along Arbor Road.

Wikipedia tells the following history:

In 1928, wealthy art lovers Delight and Garfield Merner of Hillsborough bought 3.5 acres (14,000 m2) of land at the edge of Menlo Park in order to create a center for craft production, having been inspired by craft guilds they had seen in Europe. They worked closely with architect, Gardner Dailey and artist, Pedro Joseph de Lemos to design a Spanish Colonial style complex, re-using some of the old farm buildings on the property. The Merners’ goals were "to provide a workplace for artists; to encourage the crafting of handsome objects for everyday use; and to support all peasant or folk art, especially that of early California."

Ansel Adams was the Guild's photographer of record and took the first interior and exterior photographs shortly after the buildings were completed.

Some of the tiles and objects of art used to decorate the walls were brought from Spain, Tunis and Morocco. Additional tiles, mosaics and frescoes were executed by the de Lemos family and Maxine Albro. The logo was designed by Pedro [de] Lemos, who served as the Guild's first president from 1930 to 1932, then as vice president in 1932-33.

In 1932, the Merners' interest in the Stanford Home for Convalescent Children (now Lucile Packard Children's Hospital) prompted them to invite its Palo Alto Auxiliary to provide lunch service at Allied Arts Guild for the benefit of the Home. The Merners retired from active operation of Allied Arts Guild in 1935 and leased the complex to the Home's Senior Auxiliary. The Allied Arts Guild Auxiliary is the name of the entity now operating the complex in support of the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford. The Guild premises were renovated in 2004 at a cost of $8.5 million to meet current earthquake standards and to repair structural problems. Replacements for broken roof tiles were produced by hand to match the original tiles.

Book: San Francisco

Page Number(s) of Excerpt: 471

Year Originally Published: 1940

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